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Product Overview
The Newsinte SMRGBCD001 is a rechargeable wireless mouse that can connect over 2.4G (USB receiver) or Bluetooth, giving you two ways to control a computer or tablet without a cable. This guide is based strictly on the official Newsinte documentation for the SMRGBCD001. If you are switching between a laptop and a tablet, the dual connection options can simplify your setup without changing devices.
What the Newsinte SMRGBCD001 user guide covers
This documentation focuses on pairing order for 2.4G use, Bluetooth discovery names, iOS AssistiveTouch requirements, charging behavior, sleep/wake behavior, and FCC interference guidance. It also includes a short set of manufacturer precautions for slow movement, connection failures, and power saving.
Best suited for:
- Users who want a quick plug-in connection using the included USB nano receiver.
- Tablet users who prefer Bluetooth pairing and do not want to occupy a USB port.
- iPhone or iPad users on iOS 13 or later who can enable AssistiveTouch for mouse control.
Consider alternatives if:
- You cannot enable AssistiveTouch on iOS, since iOS use requires that accessibility setting.
- You need documentation with detailed button maps or DPI ranges, because the official guide does not list those specifics.
The documentation distinguishes two connection paths: 2.4G receiver mode for fast pairing and Bluetooth mode that appears as BT3.0Mouse or BT5.2 Mouse in device search results. A non-obvious detail is that the 2.4G connection is order-sensitive: plugging in the receiver, waiting about 5 seconds, and only then switching power on improves quick pairing reliability.
How to Use Newsinte SMRGBCD001 Wireless Mouse
To use the Newsinte SMRGBCD001, choose either 2.4G receiver mode or Bluetooth mode, then complete pairing before regular operation. Receiver mode works by inserting the nano receiver and turning the mouse on after a short wait. Bluetooth mode works by turning the mouse on, searching for its Bluetooth name, and pairing, with extra iOS steps for on-screen pointer control.
Use the 2.4G USB receiver mode
2.4G mode connects through the included nano receiver, which your computer treats like a standard USB mouse. Following the pairing order matters because the mouse and receiver sync quickly right after power-up. If you turn the mouse on before the receiver is ready, pairing can fail or feel inconsistent.
- Open the receiver cover on the bottom of the mouse and remove the USB nano receiver.
- Plug the nano receiver into your computer's USB port.
- Wait about 5 seconds so the computer can recognize the receiver.
- Slide the power switch on the bottom of the mouse to ON.
- Move the mouse to confirm the cursor responds normally.
Tip: If you are troubleshooting a connection issue, repeat the sequence in the same order: receiver first, short wait, then power on.
Use Bluetooth pairing (including iPad and iPhone)
Bluetooth mode connects directly to a device without the USB receiver, so it is useful for tablets and phones. The mouse appears in Bluetooth scanning as BT3.0Mouse or BT5.2 Mouse, and you select the matching entry to pair. On iPad or iPhone, you may also need to enable AssistiveTouch so the system shows a pointer and accepts mouse input.
- Slide the power switch to ON.
- On your device, turn on Bluetooth and start a search for new devices.
- Select BT3.0Mouse or BT5.2 Mouse and complete pairing.
- On iPad, go to Settings, then Accessibility, then Touch, then AssistiveTouch, and turn it on.
- On iPhone or iPad, confirm you are on iOS 13 or later, then enable AssistiveTouch and pair the mouse through Bluetooth settings.
Note: If the mouse does not appear in Bluetooth search, the documentation recommends turning off Bluetooth on other connected devices, restarting the mouse, and then long-pressing DPI while syncing Bluetooth again.
Charge the mouse and understand the indicator light
The mouse charges through a Micro USB port and can be powered from common USB sources. Using a phone charger, power bank, or a computer USB port all works as long as the cable fits the Micro USB charging interface. The indicator behavior is simple: the charging light is blue while charging and turns off when charging is complete.
- Connect a Micro USB cable to the mouse charging port.
- Connect the other end to a phone charger, power bank, or a computer USB port.
- Confirm the charging light is blue while charging.
- Disconnect after the light turns off, which indicates a full charge.
Sleep and wake behavior
The mouse can enter sleep automatically after extended inactivity to reduce battery drain. Waking it is done by moving the mouse or pressing any key. For longer storage, the documentation advises switching the power off manually to preserve battery.
Technical Specifications
The official documentation provides a small set of operational specifications and requirements that affect setup and compatibility.
| Specification | Value | Practical meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Wireless mode | 2.4G USB receiver | Uses a nano receiver for fast plug-and-play on computers (requires a USB port). |
| Bluetooth device names | BT3.0Mouse or BT5.2 Mouse | These are the names you select during Bluetooth pairing on phones, tablets, or computers. |
| iOS requirement | iOS 13 or later | Needed for iPhone/iPad pointer support and pairing flow described in the documentation. |
| Accessibility setting (iPad/iOS) | AssistiveTouch | Must be enabled so the device accepts mouse input as intended. |
| Pairing timing (2.4G) | Wait ~5 seconds before power on | Helps the receiver initialize, improving quick pairing reliability. |
| Specification | Value | Practical meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Charging interface | Micro USB | Charges from common USB power sources without a dedicated dock. |
| Charging indicator | Blue while charging, off when full | Lets you confirm charging state at a glance. |
| Regulatory compliance | FCC Part 15, Class B device | Designed to limit interference in residential environments, with standard mitigation steps if interference occurs. |
Troubleshooting
If the mouse is not responding correctly, start by confirming power, then re-check the connection method you are using. The official documentation focuses on battery level, the bottom power switch, USB receiver port choice, Bluetooth reconnection steps, and sleep behavior. Use the table below to match symptoms to the manufacturer's suggested fixes.
| Problem | Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Mouse moves slowly or feels laggy | Battery is low | Recharge the mouse using the Micro USB charging port. |
| Mouse will not connect in 2.4G mode | Power switch is off or receiver is not working in that USB port | Confirm the bottom switch is set to ON, then move the nano receiver to a different USB port and try again. |
| Bluetooth device name does not appear during search | Other Bluetooth connections interfere or the mouse needs a restart | Turn off Bluetooth on connected devices you are not using, restart the mouse, then long-press DPI and re-run Bluetooth pairing. |
| Mouse stopped responding after being idle | Automatic sleep mode activated | Move the mouse or press any key to wake it. |
Next Steps
After setup, decide which connection method you will use most often, and keep the receiver stored in the mouse when traveling to reduce the chance of losing it. If you experience radio or TV interference, follow the FCC guidance by changing antenna orientation, increasing distance, switching circuits, or consulting a technician. For issues not addressed here, contact the manufacturer since the official documentation does not provide additional troubleshooting scenarios or expanded specifications.
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